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The Green Party of the United States originated in 1984 when 62 people from the U.S. gathered in St. Paul, Minnesota and founded the first national Green organization - the Committees of Correspondence. The Green Party of the U.S. has gone through several evolutions, from debating theory and praxis in the 1980s, to starting state parties in the ...
The Green Party's membership encompasses the fourth-highest percentage of registered voters in the United States, with a total membership of 234,120. [58] The Green Party has its strongest popular support on the Pacific Coast, Upper Great Lakes, and Northeast, as reflected in the geographical distribution of Green candidates elected. [59]
The Green Party has been active as a third party since the 1980s. The party first gained widespread public attention during Ralph Nader's second presidential run in 2000. Currently, the primary national Green Party organization in the U.S. is the Green Party of the United States, which split from and eclipsed the earlier Greens/Green Party USA.
This is a list of politicians endorsed by the Green Party of the United States (GPUS) who have held elected office. GPUS publishes a semi-annual list of Greens in elected office [ 1 ] and an annual list of Green elections & winners by year.
Green Party of Alaska: Alaska Green politics [48] 1990 Left-wing: 1,522 ... America First Party (1943) Isolationism [114] 1944 1947 American Vegetarian Party: 1947 1967
They will host an official launch in Houston on Sept. 24 and the party's first national convention in a major U.S. city next summer. ... The merger involves the Renew America Movement, formed in ...
Just days before the state board of elections voted on certifying the Green Party, a Democratic law firm submitted several complaints requesting that nearly 400 signatures be deemed invalid.
In 2016, Robert Satiacum, Jr., a faithless elector from Washington, cast his presidential vote for Native American activist Faith Spotted Eagle and his vice-presidential vote for LaDuke, making her the first Green Party member and the first Native American woman to receive an Electoral College vote for vice president. [13]